Since September 23, 2024, an escalating conflict in Lebanon has led to widespread displacement and suffering for civilians. On September 30, the government reported that 1 million people are now displaced — roughly 20% of the country’s population — with 900,000 people fleeing in the last week alone. 

The scale of recent violence has been especially worrying. The Lebanese Ministry of Health has reported over 1,500 deaths since the conflict began in October 2023, with over 600 occurring in just the last week.  For context, during the last conflict in 2006, 1,300 people were killed over 34 days. 

”People are obviously living in terror of what will happen next.”

“The fear is overwhelming,” says Concern Lebanon Country Director Sherzada Khan. “Each blast shakes the area around you and causes immense panic and fear. People are obviously living in terror of what will happen next.”

Concern has been in Lebanon since 2013 and has launched a response to the rapidly-evolving emergency. Here’s what you need to know.

Get the news that matters, delivered straight to your inbox

1. Approximately 1 million people are now displaced

Armed confrontations have been displacing people in southern Lebanon for the last year, with over 111,000 people uprooted before a sharp escalation in conflict on September 23. As mentioned above, after a week of intensified fighting, the government reported on September 30 that over 1 million people are now displaced, with roughly 900,000 fleeing in the last week alone. 

This is a major displacement for a country with a population of just over 5 million. Many families have relocated to Beirut and Mount Lebanon, but others have arrived in Tripoli and Akkar (where Concern operates). The latest estimate from the UN’s International Organization for Migration (IOM), released on September 28, reports that around 32% of displaced people are living in collective shelters. 

Lebanese Red Cross teams conducted search and rescue operations in the rubble of collapsed buildings following an attack in Nabatieh province on September 27, 2024. (Photo by Ramiz Dallah/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Lebanese Red Cross teams conducted search and rescue operations in the rubble of collapsed buildings following an attack in Nabatieh province on September 27, 2024. (Photo by Ramiz Dallah/Anadolu via Getty Images)

2. Refugees in Lebanon face greater challenges and impossible choices

Per capita, Lebanon is the largest host country for refugees. Out of a population estimated by the World Bank at 5.3 million people, 1.5 million are refugees. Most are from neighboring Syria. Approximately 795,000 are registered with the UN’s High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Unlike their Lebanese counterparts, displaced Syrian families are unable to access the collective shelters, and face more limited options for shelter and protection. 

As of September 30, the UNHCR has reported approximately 100,000 people fleeing to Syria in order to escape violence. The humanitarian situation in Syria remains dire, with protracted conflict and the effects of the 2023 earthquake leaving critical infrastructure compromised and millions of civilians in need of humanitarian assistance amid critical underfunding. The UNHCR’s commissioner, Filippo Grandi, said last week: “It is yet another ordeal for families who previously fled war in Syria only now to be bombed in the country where they sought shelter. The Middle East cannot afford a new displacement crisis.” 

The village of Shir Hmyrin in Akkar has been home to many displaced Syrian refugees over the last 13 years. (Photo: Dalia Khamissy/Concern Worldwide)
The village of Shir Hmyrin in Akkar has been home to many displaced Syrian refugees over the last 13 years. (Photo: Dalia Khamissy/Concern Worldwide)

3. Lebanon had been dealing with other challenges before this latest escalation

“Lebanon has been through so much already in recent years,” says Concern’s Sherzada Khan. The country has continued to deal with the long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 Beirut port explosion

It is also facing what the World Bank considers to be one of the worst economic crises since the 19th Century. The country recorded triple-digit inflation in 2023 (over 221%), and the Lebanese lira devalued by over 98% between January 2023 and March 2024. 

“The Middle East cannot afford a new displacement crisis.”

4. Poverty rates in Lebanon have more than tripled over the last decade

These economic challenges have become personal challenges for nearly half of the country’s population. A May 2024 World Bank report revealed that  44% of the country’s population live below the poverty line, representing a more-than-200% increase since 2012.

These rates are significantly higher in parts of the country that rely on agriculture and construction, including Akkar — where the poverty rate is estimated to be at 70%. The World Bank also reports that the poverty gap (the amount between an income and the poverty line) has widened from 3% in 2012 to 9.4% in 2022. Once again, these consequences are also felt more acutely among refugees living in Lebanon. It’s estimated that 90% of Syrians in the country are living below the poverty line. 

The aftermath of an air strike in Beirut on September 21, 2024. (Photo: Houssam Shbaro/Andalou via Getty Images)
The aftermath of an air strike in Beirut on September 21, 2024. (Photo: Houssam Shbaro/Andalou via Getty Images)

5. Currently, there isn’t enough humanitarian funding to reach everyone affected

In addition to the scale of violence, the scale of response needed has also become a challenge. Prior to the escalation of violence last month, the UN’s Lebanon humanitarian appeal for 2024 had already been underfunded. Khan estimates that the ongoing hostilities are “bound to further exacerbate the funding situation with a direct impact on the people in need of critical and lifesaving assistance.

“What we need now urgently is more funding so we can provide safe shelters and core relief items to improve hygiene and living standards, like diapers, soaps, and blankets,” he adds. “With more funding we could also provide more emergency cash assistance so people can buy food and essential needs.”

The crisis in Lebanon: Concern’s response

Concern has been in Lebanon for over a decade, working with both refugee and Lebanese national families in particularly vulnerable situations. Part of that work had been focused on rehabilitating buildings to provide safe and dignified shelter to people fleeing conflict. 

We are working with the UNHCR and Lebanese Red Cross to scale up this work, locating and rehabilitating more buildings to use as additional accommodation, including rehabilitating water, sanitation, and hygiene access. We are also providing emergency cash assistance ($90 per family over a period of three to six months), as well as psychological first-aid to children who have been displaced by the fighting.

Support Concern's response in Lebanon